PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Researchers awarded $1.3M to help military Veterans battling Acute Myeloid Leukemia

Researchers awarded $1.3M to help military Veterans battling Acute Myeloid Leukemia
2024-10-15
(Press-News.org) CLEVELAND—With a new four-year, $1.3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, researchers at Case Western Reserve University are investigating a new approach to treat Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) in military Veterans.  

AML is the most common form of blood cancer in adults, and many patients suffer relapses—especially Veterans, due to exposure to harmful chemicals and radiation during active duty, according to the National Center for Biotechnology Information.

There is no effective treatment for AML and, according to the National Institutes of Health, half of treated patients suffer a relapse after therapy—mainly  because special leukemia cells, called leukemia-initiating cells (LICs), can survive chemotherapy.

Parameswaran Ramakrishnan, lead investigator and associate professor of pathology at the Case Western Reserve School of Medicine, and his team are investigating treating AML by targeting how cancer cells use energy.

Like many cancer cells, AML cells need more sugar to grow. The hexosamine biosynthetic pathway (HBP), which is triggered by increased sugar consumption, generates a chemical essential for nutrition, illness, metabolism and signaling.

This chemical helps AML cells survive by interacting with and changing proteins in the cells.

“We found that blocking the HBP pathway kills AML cells while leaving healthy cells unharmed,” Ramakrishnan said. “We also discovered that LICs have high levels of HBP proteins compared to normal blood cells, which may be why AML often comes back after treatment. We believe that targeting the HBP pathway can help prevent AML relapse and improve treatment options.”

If successful, their research may also provide insight into treating prostate, colon and lung cancer, which are also especially challenging for Veterans, according to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs.                       

###

At Case Western Reserve, one of the nation's leading research universities, we're driven to seek knowledge and find solutions to some of the world's most pressing problems. Nearly 6,200 undergraduate and 6,100 graduate students from across 96 countries study in our more than 250 degree programs across arts, dental medicine, engineering, law, management, medicine, nursing, science and social work. Our location in Cleveland, Ohio—a hub of cultural, business and healthcare activity—gives students unparalleled access to engaging academic, research, clinical, entrepreneurial and volunteer opportunities and prepares them to join our network of 125,000+ alumni making an impact worldwide. Visit case.edu to learn more.

 

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Researchers awarded $1.3M to help military Veterans battling Acute Myeloid Leukemia Researchers awarded $1.3M to help military Veterans battling Acute Myeloid Leukemia 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New hub for high-energy astrophysics — CTAO Science Data Management Centre opens at DESY in Zeuthen

New hub for high-energy astrophysics — CTAO Science Data Management Centre opens at DESY in Zeuthen
2024-10-15
Zeuthen, Germany – On 14 October 2024, the Cherenkov Telescope Array Observatory (CTAO), along with hosting partners and shareholders Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY, celebrated the official inauguration of the Science Data Management Centre (SDMC) on the DESY campus in Zeuthen, Germany. The ceremony, chaired by Prof. Christian Stegmann, Head of DESY Zeuthen, was opened by Mario Brandenburg, Parliamentary State Secretary at the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), and Tobias Dünow, State Secretary at ...

JMIR publications CEO and Executive Editor Gunther Eysenbach achieves #1 ranking as most cited researcher in Medical Informatics for fifth consecutive year

JMIR publications CEO and Executive Editor Gunther Eysenbach achieves #1 ranking as most cited researcher in Medical Informatics for fifth consecutive year
2024-10-15
Toronto, ON (October 14, 2024) – JMIR Publications is proud to announce that Gunther Eysenbach, founder, CEO and executive editor, has once again been named the #1 most cited researcher in the subfield of medical informatics by Stanford/Elsevier’s Top 2% Scientists rankings. This marks the fifth consecutive year that Dr Eysenbach has secured this prestigious position, reaffirming his status as a leading authority and driving force in the field. He is also ranked #36 in the Top 100 Scientists in Information & Communication ...

ERC grant for groundbreaking wearable health tech

ERC grant for groundbreaking wearable health tech
2024-10-15
Dr. Levent Beker from the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Koç University, once again received European Research Council (ERC) support for his scientific research that focuses on improving the quality of our daily lives.  His previous project on an implant that can detect signs of heart failure and degrade in the body without surgery was granted €2.5 million Starting Grant from the ERC. Last year, his research on a wireless micro sensor that enables real-time monitoring of food spoilage at supermarkets, was published in Nature FoodMagazine. Currently leading the Bio-integrated ...

NIH announces winners of prize competition to improve postpartum maternal health and health equity through innovative diagnostics

2024-10-15
The National Institutes of Health (NIH) has announced the winners of the Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics Technology (RADx® Tech) for Maternal Health Challenge, an $8 million prize competition to encourage development of postpartum maternal health diagnostics for use in regions that have limited access to maternity care. The eight winning teams developed home-based and point-of-care diagnostics, wearables and other accessible technologies to improve postpartum health outcomes during the period when most maternal deaths occur—up to one year after delivery or the end of ...

APS and SPR honor Dr. Cynthia F. Bearer with the 2025 Mary Ellen Avery Neonatal Research Award

APS and SPR honor Dr. Cynthia F. Bearer with the 2025 Mary Ellen Avery Neonatal Research Award
2024-10-15
October 15, 2024 – The American Pediatric Society (APS) and the Society for Pediatric Research (SPR) are pleased to announce Cynthia F. Bearer, MD, PhD, as the 2025 Mary Ellen Avery Neonatal Research Award recipient. This award honors a pediatric investigator who has made important contributions to neonatal health through basic or translational research. Dr. Bearer is the William & Lois Briggs Chair of Neonatology and Chief, Division of Neonatology, Rainbow Babies & Children’s Hospital and Professor of Pediatrics & Neurosciences at Case Western Reserve University. ...

Election delays and voter trust

2024-10-15
A pre-registered survey of nearly 10,000 Americans shows that delays in declaring the winners of elections cause distrust in the electoral process, but that reassuring voters before polls close that delays are normal can prevent this distrust from taking root. National elections in the United States were not definitively settled for days after election day in 2020 and 2022. There are legitimate reasons for such delays, including state rules about when counting can commence and laws about whether mailed ballots postmarked on election day must be counted. However, delayed results ...

US air pollution monitoring network has gaps in coverage, say researchers

US air pollution monitoring network has gaps in coverage, say researchers
2024-10-15
The lack of air-quality monitoring capabilities across the U.S. affects the health of millions of people and disproportionately impacts minority and low socioeconomic-status communities, say researchers in ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology Letters. Motivated by a new U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standard for air pollution, the team employed a model for fine-scale air pollution mapping using real-world data, and it indicates there is an urgent need to address gaps in the agency’s monitoring ...

Continuous monitoring of fatigue in factory workers

Continuous monitoring of fatigue in factory workers
2024-10-15
A system of wearable sensors and machine learning can continuously monitor factory workers for signs of physical fatigue. Factory work can be physically strenuous, and a safe and ethical workplace must ensure that workers do not become overly fatigued, which can increase the risk of injury and accident, cause chronic health problems, and also impair performance. A system designed by Ping Guo, Qi Zhu, and colleagues measures heart rate, heart rate variability, skin temperature, and locomotor patterns ...

Farmer ants’ wearable bacteria

Farmer ants’ wearable bacteria
2024-10-15
A study investigates the evolution of beneficial bacteria that live inside and on the surface of farming ants. Attine ants farm fungi, in one of the natural world’s best-studied mutualistic symbioses. In the 1990s, the picture of this mutualism was expanded to include another partner: an actinobacteria, Pseudonocardia, which lives on the ants’ cuticle—their hard exoskeleton—where its cultures are fed by secretions of subcuticular glands. Pseudonocardia is known to kill the fungal pathogen Escovopsis, that might destroy the ants’ mutualistic fungus. Jacobus J. Boomsma and colleagues sequenced samples ...

Political polarization and trust

2024-10-15
A collection of 15 articles from the Polarization and Trust Special Feature explores the complex nature of the emotional divide between political opponents, using approaches from a variety of disciplines, including political science, psychology, sociology, and economics. The articles emerged from a 2023 workshop on “Directions of Polarization, Social Norms, and Trust in Societies,” held at MIT and organized by  Kati Kish Bar-On,  Eugen Dimant,  Yphtach Lelkes and  David Rand. Researchers from a number of teams identified ways in which partisans mistrust and inaccurately perceive their political opponents, and other teams  examined why such inaccurate ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New research connects heart attacks to brain, nervous and immune systems

Researchers advance understanding of female sexual anatomy to improve pelvic cancer radiotherapy

MLEDGE project proves federated learning can support real-world AI services

Lab-grown organoids reveal how glioblastoma outsmarts treatment

Insights from brain’s waste-flushing system may improve diagnosis of idiopathic intracranial hypertension

Tornado-forecast system can increase warning lead times, study finds

Dario Fiore receives ERC Proof of Concept to develop the VERIFHE Project

Broadband ultrasonic imaging shows defects in all types of concrete

Discovery challenges long-held beliefs on early human technology in East Asia

Medicaid expansion and overall mortality among women with breast cancer

Acupuncture for migraine without aura and connection-based efficacy prediction

Liverpool scientists discover graphene’s electronic properties in 3D material in boost for green computing

Xigou site discovery challenges long-held views on early human technology in East Asia

Tiny gold spheres could improve solar energy harvesting

A rich social environment is associated with better cognitive health outcomes for older adults, study finds

Electroencephalography enables continuous decoding of hand motion angles in polar coordinates

Call for pitches: Contribute to JMIR's News & Perspectives section

This flower evolved a new shape so that different birds could pollinate it. Then, it spread.

Scientists engineer unsinkable metal tubes

Used EVs currently offer car buyers lowest lifetime cost of ownership

Wild blueberries: New review explores benefits for heart, metabolism and the microbiome

New white paper on rebuilding trust at work amid AI-driven change and burnout published by University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies

How to motivate collective action on climate

Healing Hearts, Changing Minds awards $566,260 to seven projects to advance psychedelic-assisted end-of-life care

A novel rolling driving principle-enabled linear actuator for bidirectional smooth motion

Prognostic nutritional index predicts outcomes in hepatocellular carcinoma treated with atezolizumab and bevacizumab

Mountain snow and water forecasting tool developed by WSU researchers

Training the next generation of translational virologists: Reflections from the 2025 Global Virus Network Short Course

Should companies replace human workers with robots? New study takes a closer look

New study proposes global framework to safeguard world’s most vulnerable regions amid climate crisis

[Press-News.org] Researchers awarded $1.3M to help military Veterans battling Acute Myeloid Leukemia